Bartlett, TN: October 28, 2010- In an effort to capitalize on the popularity of 3D, Rachael Ray has teamed up with American Paper Optics, LLC and 3-D Vision to broadcast segments of the Rachael Ray 3D Halloween Special to over 2.4 million viewers. The special, which is to air this Friday, October 29th, uses the 3D glasses manufactured by American Paper Optics and distributed through this week’s TV Guide Magazine. However, unlike the new 3D Blu-ray and Cable/Satellite broadcast standards, the show will be accessible to viewers that do not own a 3D television.

When we begin the process, we will send you a die line in Illustrator .eps format and/or PDF format. To keep your return artwork files to a minimum size, you only need to design one frame and we will step and repeat the rest. (Please read the instructions below carefully.)

You can convert the colors to CMYK to print 4 color or RGB for web use. If you want to hide the image more you can also add Yellow, Orange, and Pink.

Set your pattern first (red) 100%, then place hidden image and/or message on top (pms333).
Set the opacity to 20% to 40% (light enough not to see it without glasses,but dark enough to see with glasses. Every printer will be different, so that part we can not give an exact %.)

The addition of special effects to a theatrical presentation to create a "fourth dimension" - the sensation of tactile experience: scent, temperature, touch. Examples:Beetles tickle the legs of unsuspecting cinema-goers, the wing beat of a gigantic dragon breezes through the rows of seats and spiders descend from the ceiling.

The reason you need to wear glasses to watch 3D is that a separate image needs to be sent to each eye, with the brain combining the two images into a single image with 3D characteristics. In other words, the 3D process actually fools your brain into thinking it is seeing a 3D image, so it creates one for you.

ColorCode 3D is a patented stereo viewing system deployed in the 2000s that uses amber and blue filters. Notably, unlike other anaglyph systems, ColorCode 3D is intended to provide perceived nearly full colour viewing (particularly within the RG color space) with existing television and paint mediums. One eye (left, amber filter) receives the cross-spectrum colour information and one eye (right, blue filter) sees a monochrome image designed to give the depth effect.